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Malagasy Adverbs Andrea Rackowski McGill University August 1996

Malagasy Adverbs Andrea Rackowski McGill University August 1996

Malagasy Adverbs Andrea Rackowski McGill University August 1996

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In The Structure of <strong>Malagasy</strong>, Volume II , ed. Ileana Paul, UCLA Working Papers in Linguistics, 1998.<br />

Categories, but this is a minor change, as he has elsewhere mentioned this possibility for<br />

certain languages.<br />

Kayne’s theory also holds in this exercise, and it is, indeed, an asset to<br />

explanation. The status of each Spec as an adjunction allows the necessary movement of<br />

elements out of embedded positions, resulting in a correct prediction of grammatical and<br />

ungrammatical orders in <strong>Malagasy</strong>. The Kayne-type tree requires a great deal of<br />

movement to obtain the surface order of elements, but the surface order is at least<br />

possible, as long as certain categories are able to be inserted to serve as landing sites for<br />

movement (or alternatively are always present in a large string of empty categories).<br />

Insertion of categories is an attractive solution to Kayne’s need for landing sites, and this<br />

paper helps produce positive evidence for this theory.<br />

The data and processes presented here indicate an underlying structure which<br />

relies on AgrP insertion to create surface word order. This process has interesting<br />

implications for the existence of non-content-full categories, which have been argued not<br />

to exist. <strong>Malagasy</strong>, however, must have these categories insert in order to explain the<br />

grammaticality of certain structures. Alternative explanations, such as moving to another<br />

Spec, do not predict the same grammatical results and are therefore inadequate.<br />

The structure presented here explains the variant behaviour of the pre- and postverbal<br />

adverbs, as well as the position of subject, Speech Act adverbs, and matetika. The<br />

framing pair na (dia)...aza is also explained through a head-head selection mechanism<br />

and subsequent movement of elements. In addition, the tree is restrictive in its<br />

predictions of grammatical and ungrammatical word orders - another desirable<br />

characteristic of structures.<br />

The synthesis of these theories with <strong>Malagasy</strong> word order is generally successful.<br />

This paper has raised several theoretical possibilities, which may be further developed in<br />

the future in more cross-linguistic research.<br />

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